Print+in+Italics
11italicise — (Brit.) v. print in italics, print using a form of type in which the letters lean to the right (also italicize) …
12italicises — italicise (Brit.) v. print in italics, print using a form of type in which the letters lean to the right (also italicize) …
13italicising — italicise (Brit.) v. print in italics, print using a form of type in which the letters lean to the right (also italicize) …
14italicize — (Amer.) i tal·i·cize || ɪ tælɪsaɪz v. print in italics, print using a form of type in which the letters lean to the right (also italicise) …
15italicizes — italicize (Amer.) i tal·i·cize || ɪ tælɪsaɪz v. print in italics, print using a form of type in which the letters lean to the right (also italicise) …
16italicizing — italicize (Amer.) i tal·i·cize || ɪ tælɪsaɪz v. print in italics, print using a form of type in which the letters lean to the right (also italicise) …
17italicise — verb print in italics • Syn: ↑italicize • Derivationally related forms: ↑italic, ↑italic (for: ↑italicize) • Hypernyms: ↑print, ↑ …
18italicize — transitive verb ( cized; cizing) Date: 1795 1. to print in italics or underscore with a single line 2. emphasize < the microphone italicizes every curdled top note P. G. Davis > • italicization noun …
19italicize — to print in italics (for emphasis, etc.), 1795, from ITALIC (Cf. italic) + IZE (Cf. ize). Related: Italicized; italicizing …
20à la — is used in English without regard to gender, despite being feminine in French (the corresponding masculine form au is not used in this way in English). Apart from its use in phrases borrowed whole from French (e.g. à la carte, and cookery terms… …